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Feb 4, 2012
02/12
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very often windows without screens on them in an environment where mosquitos could spread malaria. not to have screens on the window would be a very remarkable faint -- thing. one vote and my book shows stagnant water is going to breed mosquitos carrying disease. so yes. the conditions for west indian workers for a very different from that for the white skilled workers. the thing is too the west indian workers found their lives improved by the work they did at calzone. if you compare their living standards and pay to the white workers it was pretty bad but if you compare it to when they faced in barbados or jamaica this was not just an inventor for them but a chance to improve their lives and many of them were able to save money and send money home and studies have shown. they bought some land and become self-sufficient in their -- >> guest: what medical care did the workers have? >> guest: there were vast hospitals. very advanced medical care for the time and necessary because g disease continued throughout the u.s. period. it was a big danger to the construction project. even tho
very often windows without screens on them in an environment where mosquitos could spread malaria. not to have screens on the window would be a very remarkable faint -- thing. one vote and my book shows stagnant water is going to breed mosquitos carrying disease. so yes. the conditions for west indian workers for a very different from that for the white skilled workers. the thing is too the west indian workers found their lives improved by the work they did at calzone. if you compare their...
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Feb 28, 2012
02/12
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we want to create an environment in which our leaders can succeed, and we know that if we want to, we can do that, and we should do it because it's our constitutional responsibility, because oversight is our responsibility, because it's lazy management if we allow it to go to the end of the year and be in a great big pile like this or a continuing resolution, which is worse. we need to go over item by item. i'm on six subcommittees. all three of us are on the appropriations committee. we'll probably have 30 hearings in the next two or three months. we'll have a good opportunity to go through this trillion dollars of spending that we do and -- and try to spend it wisely and to save money wherever we can. and one last thing, when this comes to the floor and we debate it and we get through with it and we approve the trillion dollars of spending, we can show to the american people that that's not most of the problem we have in spending in this country. that's 38% of the budget. and according to the -- the congressional budget office, it's scheduled to go up over the next ten years at the
we want to create an environment in which our leaders can succeed, and we know that if we want to, we can do that, and we should do it because it's our constitutional responsibility, because oversight is our responsibility, because it's lazy management if we allow it to go to the end of the year and be in a great big pile like this or a continuing resolution, which is worse. we need to go over item by item. i'm on six subcommittees. all three of us are on the appropriations committee. we'll...
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87
Jun 1, 2012
06/12
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eye 87
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there's a long list of players who see the internet as a very fundamental part of the environment now and they would like very much to have some influence over it. i worry about even such activities as the internet governance form which out of the world summit on the society. the reason it has been successful, at least until now started as a multistakeholder activity. as responsibility for the subject matter, under discussion, in the itf shifted from one body to another. the question about who controls the agenda now beings the -- becomes the big issue. the process of involvement in the united nations has one unfortunate property that it political sizes everything. all the consideration that are made whether in the i.t.u. orb are elsewhere are taken and colored by national interest. as long standing participate in the intesht architecture board and the task force where we check our guns at door and we have technical discussions about how tboas improve the operation of the internet to color that with other national disputes which are nonrelevant to the technology is very dangerous pres
there's a long list of players who see the internet as a very fundamental part of the environment now and they would like very much to have some influence over it. i worry about even such activities as the internet governance form which out of the world summit on the society. the reason it has been successful, at least until now started as a multistakeholder activity. as responsibility for the subject matter, under discussion, in the itf shifted from one body to another. the question about who...
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Dec 6, 2012
12/12
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and they have a role in maintaining the peaceful global security environment. if the issue is that they are not part of a global security environment, and i think we have to be concerned about them. >> [inaudible] spent i think we're hopeful they're part of the security environment, and we're doing everything we can possible with the chinese, least on the bill to build to try to bring them into the security environment in a way that, it's already fairly mature globally in a way that they are a productive part of that environment. >> mike evans from the time. admiral, since the strategy was changed towards your every of the world, what would you say are the most important capabilities you've actually been able to add to pacific command than what you have before? >> well, i'd like to know we've only been at the rebounds, you know, publicly for less than a year. so strategies often take time to be able to get assets and policies in place. but i think the most important thing was, was what we did in the beginning was the fact that we looked at the world, a post, yo
and they have a role in maintaining the peaceful global security environment. if the issue is that they are not part of a global security environment, and i think we have to be concerned about them. >> [inaudible] spent i think we're hopeful they're part of the security environment, and we're doing everything we can possible with the chinese, least on the bill to build to try to bring them into the security environment in a way that, it's already fairly mature globally in a way that they...
110
110
Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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he voted with congress over 200 times against our environment and over 28 times against obamacare. he has voted with them on issue after issue on every -- >> moderator: congressman's dold you voted against obamacare. why? dold: if we look at the affordable care act, we can agree there things are things that are very -- i think we want to call it by its name and frankly i don't want to offend somebody that might want to call it something else but the long and short of it is i think we have 21 new taxes on this. the estimates in terms of the cost estimates on the new set of 10 years doubled so this is going to be enormously troubling. schneider: it did not double. dold: it did her career talking about a two year plan so i think this is why it's troubling because small businesses are looking at how can i be able to in essence pay the penalty and tell people they are on their own for health insurance? as someone who runs a business and someone who has deal with 100 employees from extended family, to tell them that they are going to be on their own for health insurance, i can think a fe
he voted with congress over 200 times against our environment and over 28 times against obamacare. he has voted with them on issue after issue on every -- >> moderator: congressman's dold you voted against obamacare. why? dold: if we look at the affordable care act, we can agree there things are things that are very -- i think we want to call it by its name and frankly i don't want to offend somebody that might want to call it something else but the long and short of it is i think we have...
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Mar 7, 2012
03/12
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object is in a very difficult environment. the record will remain open for one week from questions by members of the committee. i would have said she was honored as promptly as possible if questions are propounded. i'm a fact, greatest amateur. thank you. >> thank you. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> i believe it is yet possible that we will come to this country not send late because we were born here, but because of the kind great and good land to you and i wanted to be and that together we have made. that is my hope. that is my reason for seeking the president yet the united states. >> the leadership of this nation has a clear and immediate challenge to go to work affect his late and go to work immediately to restore proper respect for law and order in this land and not just prior to election day either. the mac energy secretary steven chu testified about the obama administration's energy policy in proposed budget. topics inc
object is in a very difficult environment. the record will remain open for one week from questions by members of the committee. i would have said she was honored as promptly as possible if questions are propounded. i'm a fact, greatest amateur. thank you. >> thank you. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> i believe it is yet possible that we will come to this country not send late because...
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Aug 27, 2012
08/12
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it's an open environment. we just sit in rows of tables, and what's great about that is the collaboration that it brings. we're -- one of the things i love about our company is that they really encourage ideas from all over the company, and it can really start from the bottom up. and if you've got an idea to really just be able to talk to the people around you very quickly to get something done. i always liken it to it's very much like a campaign. campaigns are very loud, everyone together just trying to get everything done, and that's exactly what our office is like. >> host: but not -- you being the republican and you being the democrat, you don't necessarily want to share information, do you? >> guest: no, until we have confidence, we'll take private and confidential calls on. a lot of it is we're just colleagues, coworkers and friends, and it's great to have a collaborative environment when you're watching the news or talking about what's happening. the nice thing about this structure is we're able to keep
it's an open environment. we just sit in rows of tables, and what's great about that is the collaboration that it brings. we're -- one of the things i love about our company is that they really encourage ideas from all over the company, and it can really start from the bottom up. and if you've got an idea to really just be able to talk to the people around you very quickly to get something done. i always liken it to it's very much like a campaign. campaigns are very loud, everyone together just...
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Mar 17, 2012
03/12
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compared to what it's like in an all white environment? as they react to you? >> sure, yeah. it's different in that well, the students are incredibly diverse. you know, probably before i taught at howard i had the same misconception that many people who aren't black is which is to think as african-americans as a certain mass. they come from different origins, different class backgrounds. i've got first people who are the first people in their immediate family to go to college. i've got other folks who they're the fourth generation of people to go to howard. they come from greater privilege than i ever saw growing up. and then there are people who are african-american. there are people who are black but not african-american. either they recent lay rifed here and they don't think of themselves as african-american. maybe they're canadian and black. so there's this tremendous set of differences and different politics and different views. and it's wonderful to see that. what's different though, about being at howard is this is a safe space. it'
compared to what it's like in an all white environment? as they react to you? >> sure, yeah. it's different in that well, the students are incredibly diverse. you know, probably before i taught at howard i had the same misconception that many people who aren't black is which is to think as african-americans as a certain mass. they come from different origins, different class backgrounds. i've got first people who are the first people in their immediate family to go to college. i've got...
170
170
May 7, 2012
05/12
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deals begin his overview of the business environment in the americas. he called for the slideshow of the regions financial, then those one on other progress. fields tried to be nonchalant. and on the ford edge, in red, you can see it there, we are holding the launch. there was dead silence. everyone turned towards fields, soviet mulally who was sitting next to him. dead man walking, thought one of his peers. i wonder who will get the americas, wanted another. sadly some started clapping but it was mulally. mark, that is great visibility. who could help mark with this? been economy ceasing to he said he would send some us of the experts to help them right away. tony brown, vice president in charge of purchasing said he would contact all the really supplies and asked them to check the components. now we are getting summer, mulally thought. lally would later call this meeting a defining moment in forged turner. he had always believed he saved the ford motor company, now he knew he would. all he needed was a plan. and as many people know, he put his plan to
deals begin his overview of the business environment in the americas. he called for the slideshow of the regions financial, then those one on other progress. fields tried to be nonchalant. and on the ford edge, in red, you can see it there, we are holding the launch. there was dead silence. everyone turned towards fields, soviet mulally who was sitting next to him. dead man walking, thought one of his peers. i wonder who will get the americas, wanted another. sadly some started clapping but it...
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Nov 10, 2012
11/12
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i'm going to ask heidi to make a final comment on the environment and then throw it open to everybody here, so get your questions ready. okay. so, heidi, the environment clearly a global challenge, clearly part of foreign policy, how does it fit into economic state craft? >> well, it fits into a lot of different things that the state department's working on, what we as a relatively new office, um, of seven months and only a few people have been working on are much more of the sort of geographic priorities that the secretary has highlighted. so i probably wouldn't be the best person to speak to the state department's view on a whole host of environmental issues. i spend a lot more time on the eurozone, on tunisia and egypt, on the u.s./china relationship, the pivot to asia. i mean, there's sort of -- there's a bit of a list from an economic analysis, um, perspective that we tend to spend most of our time on. >> okay. i would like to ask you about all of those subjects, but maybe everyone else would like a chance to do that too. so, please, questions? i think there's a mic here. is ther
i'm going to ask heidi to make a final comment on the environment and then throw it open to everybody here, so get your questions ready. okay. so, heidi, the environment clearly a global challenge, clearly part of foreign policy, how does it fit into economic state craft? >> well, it fits into a lot of different things that the state department's working on, what we as a relatively new office, um, of seven months and only a few people have been working on are much more of the sort of...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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. >> moderator: moving to a different topic of the environment, we will start with mr. mcdowell. will you support the keystone pipeline? mcdowell: the keystone pipeline is important. a need to make sure that it gets completed. it has to be done in a responsible manner and we have to give that pipeline that doesn't engage our most critical resources like water, and that is what we need to do, we need to get it done and we need to do it in a responsible manner. we have so many great natural resources here in northern washington. we have so much abundance of iron ore we have reports and water resources have to be protected. we have to make sure that it is done in a responsible manner. we have to make sure that we have the power to sufficiently power our economy. because a strong economy needs an affordable and reliable policy. >> moderator: thank you. doctor benishek? benishek: absolutely support that. in washington, we talk about all of the above energy plans. they block the keystone pipeline. they block oil and gas showing on federal land. and we need all of the above energy plans
. >> moderator: moving to a different topic of the environment, we will start with mr. mcdowell. will you support the keystone pipeline? mcdowell: the keystone pipeline is important. a need to make sure that it gets completed. it has to be done in a responsible manner and we have to give that pipeline that doesn't engage our most critical resources like water, and that is what we need to do, we need to get it done and we need to do it in a responsible manner. we have so many great natural...
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192
Apr 14, 2012
04/12
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fields began his overview of the business environment and the americans. he called for the slide showing the region's football. then there was one on the programs. tried to be notch lant. on the ford edge were in red. you can see it there, we're holding the launch. there was dead silence. everyone turned toward fields. so did mulally, who was sitting next to him. dead man walking thought one of his peers. i wonder who will get the americas said another. suddenly someone started clapping. it was mulally. mark, that is great visibility he deemed. who can help mark with this. send some of his quality exteeters there right away. tony brown vice president said he would contact the relevant supplies asking them to check their components. now we getting someone mulally said. he would call it the defining moment in ford's turn around. he always believed he could save. now he knew he would. all he needed was a plan and as many people know he put his plan together on a card. it was simple. it was aggressively restructure the company to profitably to operate profitab
fields began his overview of the business environment and the americans. he called for the slide showing the region's football. then there was one on the programs. tried to be notch lant. on the ford edge were in red. you can see it there, we're holding the launch. there was dead silence. everyone turned toward fields. so did mulally, who was sitting next to him. dead man walking thought one of his peers. i wonder who will get the americas said another. suddenly someone started clapping. it was...
111
111
Sep 30, 2012
09/12
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eye 111
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are actively moving between the two parties as there were previously and so when you get into that environment it's a lot easier for campaigns to individualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration of their supporters as opposed to merely trying to persuade. this year 6% from a percent or 9% that are persuadable obviously those campaigns are going to focus on them but we have a far better science now and the understanding what motivates people to vote and a lot of that informed by behavioral psychology research and so the science of mobilization and turnout has got much better. the science persuasion still, it's still pretty vague and so i do think that there has been a sort of reinvesting in a lot of localization techniques in part because we have learned in the last decade how they work so now you have these two separate things. you know once you get to somebody what you can and do to increase the likelihood of voting by 2% and now we have better targeting technics through data to figure out who you talk to them about what. i don't think of it is necessarily mess
are actively moving between the two parties as there were previously and so when you get into that environment it's a lot easier for campaigns to individualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration of their supporters as opposed to merely trying to persuade. this year 6% from a percent or 9% that are persuadable obviously those campaigns are going to focus on them but we have a far better science now and the understanding what motivates people to vote and a lot of...
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Jan 19, 2012
01/12
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eye 43
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second in the fall, will give a special message on energy and the environment. when he we need to be more strategic in focusing on the intersection of job creation, affordability, science and sustainability. we need to continue michigan's leadership in protecting the great lakes, one of the world's greatest natural assets. [applause] [applause] third i would like to work with the legislature on how to improve our laws related to lobbying, campaign finance and ethics for both state and local government. for example we should have more frequent and better disclosure of campaign contributions and we should have stronger rules governing employment of people who negotiate state contracts while in government services. [applause] [applause] on implementation of good government we will have efforts on two levels. one track will be focused on state government itself and how it operates. the second track will be a supportive partner to our local jurisdictions. data for grading principles of good governance will be how we operate in this way and that they share those four
second in the fall, will give a special message on energy and the environment. when he we need to be more strategic in focusing on the intersection of job creation, affordability, science and sustainability. we need to continue michigan's leadership in protecting the great lakes, one of the world's greatest natural assets. [applause] [applause] third i would like to work with the legislature on how to improve our laws related to lobbying, campaign finance and ethics for both state and local...
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60
Mar 26, 2012
03/12
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eye 60
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we've recently changed strategy in our approach in the maritime environment. we call it operation marteel. it focuses on a little more, on a more persistent focus on the traffic as it's moving back and forth throughout the region. using the same capacities, same authorities that we have always used, just changing the approach that we're using to see if we can reduce the impact of these organizations and the movement through the caribbean. we can force them to move other places that makes their trafficking and their movement of their capacities in a more difficult area. if you -- and that's primarily where we're working as we support the carsi pillar two. the carsi pillar three is strong and capable governments, and the goal really of safe streets. our programs really look to foster professional militaries, civilian-led militaries, foster respect for human rights, the rule of law and help support their engagement in the region. we're also looking to see how we can be creative within this area as well. where does it make sense to have u.s. military police go dow
we've recently changed strategy in our approach in the maritime environment. we call it operation marteel. it focuses on a little more, on a more persistent focus on the traffic as it's moving back and forth throughout the region. using the same capacities, same authorities that we have always used, just changing the approach that we're using to see if we can reduce the impact of these organizations and the movement through the caribbean. we can force them to move other places that makes their...
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117
Oct 1, 2012
10/12
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and when you get in to that environment, it's a lot easier for campaigns to visualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration for the porters as opposed to merely trying to persuade the small. i don't know if it's 6, 8, 9%. obviously campaigns are going to focus on them. we we have a far better science now in understanding what mate voted people to vote and a lot of it informed by behavioral psychological research. the science persuasion still pretty vague, and so i do think that there's been a sort of reinvesting in a lot of mobilization techniques in part because we have learned in the last decade how they work. you have the two separate thing. you know when you get to somebody what you can do by increase their likelihood of voting by 2% with i have better techniques to figure out who you talk to about what. i don't think about it necessarily as message or targets. good campaigns do targeting and analysis on the front thanked allows them to understand in a far more precise clean way for who are the turnout targets who they don't need to talk to until it's
and when you get in to that environment, it's a lot easier for campaigns to visualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration for the porters as opposed to merely trying to persuade the small. i don't know if it's 6, 8, 9%. obviously campaigns are going to focus on them. we we have a far better science now in understanding what mate voted people to vote and a lot of it informed by behavioral psychological research. the science persuasion still pretty vague, and so i...
111
111
Feb 26, 2012
02/12
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eye 111
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johnson put him into the position of becoming an environmental leader because the environment became the issue that it did right in the early '60s. so muskie is very famous for that. and then there's robert byrd on the cover. >> going to take a short break and be back to talk with ira how the world has changed in terms of the senate over the years. thank you. >> we're descending into single digit favorability. i want to quote -- i want to chat with you a little bit and get your views as to what has happened. the senate was once a quite respected institution. that is certainly not the case right now. nor is the house. let me quote from your prologue. this is what you say. the election of 1980 -- that was the reagan year -- shattered the great senate and the senate has never really regained its stature or reclaimed its special place in the life of our country. in the three decade since the senate has become basically a third wheel in our political system. all presidents reagan, clinton and bush did battle with the house of representatives and its powerful speakers, tip o'neill, newt gi
johnson put him into the position of becoming an environmental leader because the environment became the issue that it did right in the early '60s. so muskie is very famous for that. and then there's robert byrd on the cover. >> going to take a short break and be back to talk with ira how the world has changed in terms of the senate over the years. thank you. >> we're descending into single digit favorability. i want to quote -- i want to chat with you a little bit and get your...
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173
Aug 4, 2012
08/12
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eye 173
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it was a very pleasant environment. she said -- and this is mother teresa. she said they don't need to be distracted. we know that they are dying. there was no treatment. we know they are dying and we want them to be envelope in love. she was very tough. volunteers left because of that. >> let the microphone come to you. >> i appreciate your presentation. my question is about justice and precisely about the way it is in political and academic discourse. you probably know social justice is not always known why. to deal with this in an academic setting, i'm just wondering about how to be talk about justice, and you mentioned that in your presentation tonight. had we talk about justice in a more free-market way, even about social justice or whether that is difficult to talk about are not. >> no, i think it is and i do deal with that to some extent in the book. the other set of words, it should also be set as the common good. the common good or solidarity, even, these terms have been highly politicized and nuanced, you know, away from their original meaning. jus
it was a very pleasant environment. she said -- and this is mother teresa. she said they don't need to be distracted. we know that they are dying. there was no treatment. we know they are dying and we want them to be envelope in love. she was very tough. volunteers left because of that. >> let the microphone come to you. >> i appreciate your presentation. my question is about justice and precisely about the way it is in political and academic discourse. you probably know social...
239
239
Jul 22, 2012
07/12
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eye 239
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. >> was it a saying gra gated environment? -- segregated environment? guest: you mean at the factories? well, probably some i would say insofar as i think most institutions, you know, before the 1960's, even legally were seeing regated. i think of it in a different way. the factory with the assembly line, i think that oppressed people equally, regardless of race. black or white workers didn't get much of a break from the line. they all got 15-minute luven breaks where they had to chow down their food almost instantly. they had the same sorts of problems and so son. i think segregation in that sense was almost a moot point because of the labor issues that were at the forefront and black and white workers were sort of in the same boat as far as that went. any other questions? thank you very much for your questions. i enjoyed it.
. >> was it a saying gra gated environment? -- segregated environment? guest: you mean at the factories? well, probably some i would say insofar as i think most institutions, you know, before the 1960's, even legally were seeing regated. i think of it in a different way. the factory with the assembly line, i think that oppressed people equally, regardless of race. black or white workers didn't get much of a break from the line. they all got 15-minute luven breaks where they had to chow...
147
147
Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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eye 147
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, but not this environment, the level of focus and needs to be placed on this challenge in this environment is much different than they have experienced another environment. i need to make sure that the level of leadership focus and attention we're putting on this now is institutionalized. one of the features of military services, next summer i'm going to have turned over half my commanders. people come in from all sorts of different places who are part of this challenge right now and they need to have been focused on this and i don't want to depend if they just heard about it because it won't work. i've got enough experience to know that. so i need to institutionalize the leadership focus on this and that's why i'm going to have a charter, a regular meeting schedule for the oversight council so that among other things on a changeover over half the leadership team next year, i've got an institutional way to keep them focused on a problem that if you take it out of your crosscheck coming in now, for very long it will get out of control. >> is that the underlying issue seemed to be a dispropo
, but not this environment, the level of focus and needs to be placed on this challenge in this environment is much different than they have experienced another environment. i need to make sure that the level of leadership focus and attention we're putting on this now is institutionalized. one of the features of military services, next summer i'm going to have turned over half my commanders. people come in from all sorts of different places who are part of this challenge right now and they need...
46
46
Apr 6, 2012
04/12
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eye 46
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the guidelines are now in their third iteration and they help promote an environment in which drivers can better keep their eyes on the road and hands on the wheel. we have heard a lot today about the so-called 22nd rule, the core metric and the alliance guideline to the second rule. alliance members have been applying these guidelines to help design connectivity, technologies that are no more distracting than common manual radio controls. unlike portable devices brought into a vehicle, vehicle integrated systems are designed for use in the driving environment. when a device or feature is integrated into a car's driver vehicle interface, and that includes both the visual display and the speakers, it is designed to be used in a way that helps the driver keep their eyes on the road and hands on the wheel. it helps promote an attentive driver. the guidelines specified for example, the alliance guideline specified that displays must be in the vehicle so drivers can continue to see the roadway with their peripheral vision, even while glancing at the display. that is not possible when you a
the guidelines are now in their third iteration and they help promote an environment in which drivers can better keep their eyes on the road and hands on the wheel. we have heard a lot today about the so-called 22nd rule, the core metric and the alliance guideline to the second rule. alliance members have been applying these guidelines to help design connectivity, technologies that are no more distracting than common manual radio controls. unlike portable devices brought into a vehicle, vehicle...
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67
Sep 5, 2012
09/12
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eye 67
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actually it probably is and i know it's crappy for environment and which is going to crush this thing up and it may be go through some come you know where i'm going. we just do the best that we can do. >> but we can educate people to understand illinois look for the perfect fruit. people start to -- because we are trained that way. you know, the fruit that is now blemished and watched. how much the common person that goes into wal-mart knows that's not the best product to buy. that's process, as part of this food movement to get that, those messages out. that's, you know, it's more than just whether or not it has sugar or salt or fat, or you know, whether it's been shipped from fareway. there's a whole lot of things you take into account on whether food is good for you or not. >> teaching kids basic stuff like if it has a bug on it, ticides. in from our farmers. once in a while you put us out of i played send it out and a little spider would come crawling out. we are to waiters to put a spin on that and say that's really good because it means a bus is with pesticides. so of course we'
actually it probably is and i know it's crappy for environment and which is going to crush this thing up and it may be go through some come you know where i'm going. we just do the best that we can do. >> but we can educate people to understand illinois look for the perfect fruit. people start to -- because we are trained that way. you know, the fruit that is now blemished and watched. how much the common person that goes into wal-mart knows that's not the best product to buy. that's...
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Nov 21, 2012
11/12
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the performance and the control training environment. there is a real danger with suggesting that deal performance records are permissible for the suppression hearings to john's the reliability of dollars because one is not a controlled. we don't know whether the dog did alert to residual voters. jurors that were hidden are simply not found. >> would you allow counsel to ask about that? >> i think they could ask about it. i don't think they can demand the performance records themselves. that would be a huge deterrent from law-enforcement. third, they did train together for nearly a year. did conclude the 40 hour trek detection seminar, there was an alabama police department and the certificates page one of five of the record. second, as justice scalia pointed out, all these centers are aligned with ensuring the reliability of drug detection. it is not in the police interest to have a dog that is inaccurate in finding contraband or is inaccurate in putting an officer in harm's way. the relied upon dollars for law enforcement and the easte
the performance and the control training environment. there is a real danger with suggesting that deal performance records are permissible for the suppression hearings to john's the reliability of dollars because one is not a controlled. we don't know whether the dog did alert to residual voters. jurors that were hidden are simply not found. >> would you allow counsel to ask about that? >> i think they could ask about it. i don't think they can demand the performance records...
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128
May 4, 2012
05/12
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eye 128
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>> and outcome of the reason he went was physically unwell and he believed that the environment to williamsburg was unhealthy. so to be avoided yet this is a common kind of idea among division elite. richard henry elite, president of congress did not participate in the ratification convention in 1788 because he was on while anti-richmond was a sickly environment. he didn't want to go there while he was unwell. so that was not the reason. in fact, not ascend took slaves with him when he would to congress in new york and philadelphia. there's interesting exchanges between him and his father over what to do about the fact that the slaves had become accustomed to more latitude in behavior while they were away from virginia. in one case he freed a man because he's used to being freed now. i camping and that. that was not why he went to the college of new jersey. >> in hindsight, could he be considered a deiced and an atheist? and also, did he believe in absolute state rights in spite of what he said about congress? >> and 30 words or fewer? now, we have no evidence that he was a deiced. we have no e
>> and outcome of the reason he went was physically unwell and he believed that the environment to williamsburg was unhealthy. so to be avoided yet this is a common kind of idea among division elite. richard henry elite, president of congress did not participate in the ratification convention in 1788 because he was on while anti-richmond was a sickly environment. he didn't want to go there while he was unwell. so that was not the reason. in fact, not ascend took slaves with him when he...
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Feb 7, 2012
02/12
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first of all, general, i appreciate your concerns about global an environment of issues. you are concerned about this pipeline, and its short-term and long-term impact i think is very, you know, is what we want to talk about. do you feel that the construction of the alaskan pipeline in the '70s was detrimental to the national security? >> i think at that time that was the right thing to do. but different, much different situation, of course. now the world has changed, and greenhouse gases and climate change and world instability, all these things that are much more in the forefront than they were 40, 50 years ago when i contemplated the alaskan pipeline in general, do you think that, you know, the physics of environmental reality and reality of political instability in places like the middle east have changed dramatically since congress voted on that pipeline? >> i'm not sure i understand what -- >> i'm just saying, again, do you believe that the physics of environmental impact, issues like climate change, issues like emissions, toxic emissions and everything else, and th
first of all, general, i appreciate your concerns about global an environment of issues. you are concerned about this pipeline, and its short-term and long-term impact i think is very, you know, is what we want to talk about. do you feel that the construction of the alaskan pipeline in the '70s was detrimental to the national security? >> i think at that time that was the right thing to do. but different, much different situation, of course. now the world has changed, and greenhouse gases...
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136
Feb 2, 2012
02/12
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eye 136
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the uncertainty of the regulatory and economic environment makes it almost impossible. for short our long-term growth especially for the capital-intensive industries like manufacturing as manufactures we know firsthand board regulations are challenging, time-consuming, redundant and change a lot. taxes, fees, mandates and regulations are currently enacted without considering the accumulative and dynamic impact. the more unpredictable the business environment, the less likely it would be a competitive place to do business we need stable policies to create jobs and remain competitive. clearwater last year spent $250,000 on compliance costs, environmental compliance costs in addition to over $40,000 in consulting fees. we of more than 42 labor laws that we comply with that have their own set of compliance standards as well which requires us to use it for the party administrators on many of our programs can't to retain legal services that amount to more than $52,000 annually. and i mention all of this because the compliance cost for small business is about 125% more than it
the uncertainty of the regulatory and economic environment makes it almost impossible. for short our long-term growth especially for the capital-intensive industries like manufacturing as manufactures we know firsthand board regulations are challenging, time-consuming, redundant and change a lot. taxes, fees, mandates and regulations are currently enacted without considering the accumulative and dynamic impact. the more unpredictable the business environment, the less likely it would be a...
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Nov 4, 2012
11/12
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eye 86
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but i did become aware because i write a lot about the environment, that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy, which was leveraging another $100 billion in private capital. those seemed like typos, and the united states was spending maybe two or three billion dollars a year on clean energy before the recovery act in 1999, washington completely knocked president clinton's pie in the sky plan to spend 6 billion over five years for clean energy. it was dead on arrival in congress, and obama got $90 billion in his first month and before his staff could find the bathrooms in the west wing? just ridiculous. the stimulus was pouring unprecedented cash into wind, solar, energy efficiency in every imaginable form, advanced biofuels, electric vehicles. cutting edge research, smarter grid, cleaner coal, factories to make the green stuff in the united states. and it was by far the biggest energy bill in history. so kind of got me curious about what else was in this stimulus that everybody was laughing about. i remember i did some dogged investigative reporting. no. it was a google search
but i did become aware because i write a lot about the environment, that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy, which was leveraging another $100 billion in private capital. those seemed like typos, and the united states was spending maybe two or three billion dollars a year on clean energy before the recovery act in 1999, washington completely knocked president clinton's pie in the sky plan to spend 6 billion over five years for clean energy. it was dead on arrival in congress,...
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Oct 7, 2012
10/12
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so when you get into that environment, excellent issue for campaigns to visualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration of their supporters as opposed to merely trying to persuade them. now, this you i don't know if it's 8% are not present that are persuadable. the campaigns will focus on them. but we have a far better science now in understanding what motivates people to vote. and a lot of it -- the science of mobilization turnout has gotten much better. the science of persuasion, it's still pretty vague. and so i do think that there's been a sort of reinvesting in a lot of mobilization techniques in part because of what we've learned in the last decade. sunday of these two separate things. you certainly know what you give to somebody what you can do to increase their likelihood of voting. and now have better targeting techniques through data to forget who you talk to and about what. and so i don't think of it as necessarily message or targeting, but good campaigns do targeting and analysis on the front and that allows them to understand in a far more pr
so when you get into that environment, excellent issue for campaigns to visualize where they can get benefits by focusing on turnout or registration of their supporters as opposed to merely trying to persuade them. now, this you i don't know if it's 8% are not present that are persuadable. the campaigns will focus on them. but we have a far better science now in understanding what motivates people to vote. and a lot of it -- the science of mobilization turnout has gotten much better. the...
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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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one of them was the environment and how we covered the environment. and every time we try to do a primetime special environment we wouldn't get a rating. that led, it's one of the chapters i write about, what i do not come across well. we had leonardo dicaprio india president clinton. we got killed for it. we did a primetime environmental special, and he was chairman of earth day that you and i thought he would just make an appearance. i got killed for. that was an attempt to try to cover the environment in a serious way and drive an audience. i was concerned, frankly, about our terrorism coverage. we did more terrorism coverage than others did before 9/11. jon miller went in and interviewed bin laden, trekked into the mountains in afghanistan and interviewed him. we get a primetime special, but i had some dealings with the military in washington who said their biggest concern wasn't act of terrorism. where discussion on doing more on care. in retrospect i wish we had done more. education is one that does not get covered nearly in the depth that it sh
one of them was the environment and how we covered the environment. and every time we try to do a primetime special environment we wouldn't get a rating. that led, it's one of the chapters i write about, what i do not come across well. we had leonardo dicaprio india president clinton. we got killed for it. we did a primetime environmental special, and he was chairman of earth day that you and i thought he would just make an appearance. i got killed for. that was an attempt to try to cover the...
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Sep 17, 2012
09/12
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and the constrained fiscal environment. my office continues to convene partners and lead efforts in responsible information-sharing innovation. this is a journey. the evolution of the threats against us, the integration of our resources and the efficient use of technology require constant vigilance and leadership. the threats to our safety do not stop at jurisdictional or information boundaries. our information shouldn't either. three-quarters of the drivers of the mission of my office, we are grounded by an enduring purpose to advance responsible information sharing to further the counterterrorism and homeland security missions. we're focused on responsible information sharing to enable decisions to prevent harm to the american people. and finally, we're building capacity for responsible sharing across our -- information sharing across our mission partners at all levels of government. we are also strengthening protections for privacy, civil rights and civil liberties. this work makes us stronger. let me lab rate. every --
and the constrained fiscal environment. my office continues to convene partners and lead efforts in responsible information-sharing innovation. this is a journey. the evolution of the threats against us, the integration of our resources and the efficient use of technology require constant vigilance and leadership. the threats to our safety do not stop at jurisdictional or information boundaries. our information shouldn't either. three-quarters of the drivers of the mission of my office, we are...
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112
Apr 17, 2012
04/12
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you just want to make sure in a global environment that, obviously, it's just going to continue to get more uncertain over time, that one of the more secure places to be is the united states. >> and just briefly, where are the biggest growth markets for you looking out five, ten years? where to you see the strongest growth? >> for us it's southern cone, particularly brazil and argentina. cis market is -- those are the two really, really big markets and the third big one for us is china. >> dave, i want to ask you the same question, where are the beg growth markets in satellites, and where does the u.s. fit in terms of your global sourcing? >> well, at this point looking out both near term for the next year or 18 months and midterm, say to the middle of the decade, i would say our single biggest growth market from a geographic standpoint is in south america. that is followed fairly closely by opportunities in eastern europe and throughout the middle east and in sub-sahara africa and spots, it's not uniformly true, but certain countries and regions in south asia. from a service standpoin
you just want to make sure in a global environment that, obviously, it's just going to continue to get more uncertain over time, that one of the more secure places to be is the united states. >> and just briefly, where are the biggest growth markets for you looking out five, ten years? where to you see the strongest growth? >> for us it's southern cone, particularly brazil and argentina. cis market is -- those are the two really, really big markets and the third big one for us is...
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120
Jan 28, 2012
01/12
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but government can and does create the environment to help small businesses grow. we can do so much to level the playing field for our small businesses. that's why am proposing that we examine roughly half of mexico's small businesses, those earning less than $50,000 per year from the receipt tax. [applause] that's roughly 40,000 of our small businesses. the little ones, the start-ups, this is a bottom-up approach. many of mexico's successful businesses started at kitchen tables with not much more than the accounts and the families and a dream. we need to invest in a culture of all entrepreneur should so more of these family businesses can make. so we can grow and hire more mexicans. i am also proposing a tax credit for high-tech research and development to attract more high-paying jobs to the state. and this year it's time for us to stop the double and triple taxation that is troubling our construction and manufacturing industry to the [applause] this is often called pyramiding. a business to business tax that kills jobs and mexico. because of our tax system it's
but government can and does create the environment to help small businesses grow. we can do so much to level the playing field for our small businesses. that's why am proposing that we examine roughly half of mexico's small businesses, those earning less than $50,000 per year from the receipt tax. [applause] that's roughly 40,000 of our small businesses. the little ones, the start-ups, this is a bottom-up approach. many of mexico's successful businesses started at kitchen tables with not much...
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140
Sep 5, 2012
09/12
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eye 140
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i know, it's crappy for the environment. we're going crush this thing up and maybe going go to go -- you know where i'm going. dot best we can do. >> rights. we can educate people too. don't always look for the per fruit. we train that way. the food with no blemish, that's, you know, -- i don't know how. >> the most common name. >> tell us the common person goes in to a walmart knows that's not the best food? not the best product to buy. and that's the process the next part of the food mu. to get the educational messages out that, you know, t more than just whether or not it has sugar or salt or fat or, you know, whether it's been shipped from far away. there's a lot of things to take whether food is good for you or not. >> teaching kids basic stuff if it has a bug on it. that's a good thing. >> right. it doesn't have pesticides. >> i used to work in a restaurant we would get organic salad on it and a spider could crawling occupy. we have to train the spiders to put the spin on it. it mean it is wasn't sprayed by a pesticide
i know, it's crappy for the environment. we're going crush this thing up and maybe going go to go -- you know where i'm going. dot best we can do. >> rights. we can educate people too. don't always look for the per fruit. we train that way. the food with no blemish, that's, you know, -- i don't know how. >> the most common name. >> tell us the common person goes in to a walmart knows that's not the best food? not the best product to buy. and that's the process the next part of...
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210
Apr 14, 2012
04/12
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business of running every two years makes some extraordinarily sensitive to fund-raising, the political environment and unwillingness to be more open-minded about what they are doing. maybe that involves a cap on how often you could run. this fund-raising business is a tremendous problem not just because it influences things but the time it takes, time away from the work you are supposed to be doing in terms of representing the people in congress and that rapid turnover which we see in the house and senate, is pretty dramatic. it is very often somebody beats somebody else in a close election and the opponents as i will run again next time and the race is still on. it never really goes away. something to be thinking about in terms of where the country would go. good luck making that change. >> i am retired school administrator. i'm a volunteer at the national constitution center. i want to say first of all how much i appreciate you coming here and sharing your book with us. it is an honor to be in the same room with both of you. i look around and think about things that happened in philadelphia, the
business of running every two years makes some extraordinarily sensitive to fund-raising, the political environment and unwillingness to be more open-minded about what they are doing. maybe that involves a cap on how often you could run. this fund-raising business is a tremendous problem not just because it influences things but the time it takes, time away from the work you are supposed to be doing in terms of representing the people in congress and that rapid turnover which we see in the...
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147
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
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eye 147
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we're bumping up against her fiscal image and limits of our national environment. the challenge here is to readjust to this new reality, not to try to go back and return to the past, which at least in the case of the health care system was not serving us very well before 2008. and that gives us the opportunity. therein lies the opportunity, ability to adjust to the new reality, rather than create a world that no longer exists. i will return to that in a moment. states following the recession were hard hit because states unlike the federal government can't push their politically difficult fiscal choices and three national debt. they have to operate. states were faced with budget cuts they could not avoid. so in response to this very real crisis, the federal government passed the american recovery and reinvestment act in february 2009 with a $780 billion of stimulus resources designed to help get people back to work, but also help states with their own fiscal problems, particularly in the area of public education and health care. so there's resources were a lifeline
we're bumping up against her fiscal image and limits of our national environment. the challenge here is to readjust to this new reality, not to try to go back and return to the past, which at least in the case of the health care system was not serving us very well before 2008. and that gives us the opportunity. therein lies the opportunity, ability to adjust to the new reality, rather than create a world that no longer exists. i will return to that in a moment. states following the recession...
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96
Nov 20, 2012
11/12
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eye 96
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the political environments in which these institutions work and so forth. i do believe that private trustee boards have flex the, capacity to add those people, but the lay boards of almost all public universities in the country are politically determined. most by appointment. they don't have that characteristic so i think they are flying blind. i think that's one of the great challenges we've got to address, but having fought this battle for the last several decades, i don't have a clue op how to do it. >> ron, your point is well made, and i think this is a place, a tipping point, perhaps in the country where we've seen the very significant decrease in state funding, yet, i have not seen, in many institutions or states, where the number of public trustees have gone down accordingly so one might want to ask the question about proportionality. proportioned to the investment the state makes and who is making the decision on the board. we here at the university of vermont have a wonderful opportunity to, perhaps, lead the conversation. the governor a year ago c
the political environments in which these institutions work and so forth. i do believe that private trustee boards have flex the, capacity to add those people, but the lay boards of almost all public universities in the country are politically determined. most by appointment. they don't have that characteristic so i think they are flying blind. i think that's one of the great challenges we've got to address, but having fought this battle for the last several decades, i don't have a clue op how...
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195
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
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eye 195
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it's controlled by states or statewide information sharing environment, or co-location. there's a variety of different approaches and their talker and annual report by think thoughtful solutions like that to help bring people together to have a common information infrastructure or at a key part of you with his financial system as was knitting together into a smaller structures. >> is to be clear, they are saying if there was a federal money, to go to that kind of training, then they would be more apt to participate and be a part of this. you think from their vantage point? >> when i talk to the state and locals and the federal, there's a key focus on making sure that as we have these investments today, in the fusion centers and and other initiatives, that we are looking at making them as effective as possible by expanding the usage with this model agencies and also looking at overtime other priority crimes, other priority threats that allow them the business case to be made more effectively for these to develop support for. >> thank you. i yield back. >> the gentleman fr
it's controlled by states or statewide information sharing environment, or co-location. there's a variety of different approaches and their talker and annual report by think thoughtful solutions like that to help bring people together to have a common information infrastructure or at a key part of you with his financial system as was knitting together into a smaller structures. >> is to be clear, they are saying if there was a federal money, to go to that kind of training, then they would...
157
157
Apr 8, 2012
04/12
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eye 157
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within that environment is where yusuf ali bey iv came. the difference between father and son is the fourth was raised up did it. there was the testimony where would of the wynn said he only knew that little box of the compound. his father grope in the different place. he spent 40 years before converting to the religion. in the segregated their forces broke he had been out in the world at least. the fourth had his father that winded were the floor when the then walked and be to women with impunity every day. almost unimaginable to think the fourth could grow up in that environment and not become who he did. >> moving on to the murder, we know that chauncey was trying to write a story about the bakeries finances being sourced by the man bey acclaimed he was rightful owner of the bakery. and as it goes through financial turmoil and even as they were tapped we did not get into how the organization had such of foothold 80 you can delve into that then. what happened to the story he was working on? >> excellent question. he was sourced and chaun
within that environment is where yusuf ali bey iv came. the difference between father and son is the fourth was raised up did it. there was the testimony where would of the wynn said he only knew that little box of the compound. his father grope in the different place. he spent 40 years before converting to the religion. in the segregated their forces broke he had been out in the world at least. the fourth had his father that winded were the floor when the then walked and be to women with...
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152
Feb 2, 2012
02/12
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eye 152
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the uncertainty of the regulatory and economic environment makes it almost impossible. for short our long-term growth especially for the capital-intensive industries like manufacturing as manufactures we know firsthand board regulations are challenging, time-consuming, redundant and change a lot. taxes, fees, mandates and regulations are currently enacted without considering the accumulative and dynamic impact. the more unpredictable the business environment, the less likely it would be a competitive place to do business we need stable policies to create jobs and remain competitive. clearwater last year spent $250,000 on compliance costs, environmental compliance costs in addition to over $40,000 in consulting fees. we of more than 42 labor laws that we comply with that have their own set of compliance standards as well which requires us to use it for the party administrators on many of our programs can't to retain legal services that amount to more than $52,000 annually. and i mention all of this because the compliance cost for small business is about 125% more than it
the uncertainty of the regulatory and economic environment makes it almost impossible. for short our long-term growth especially for the capital-intensive industries like manufacturing as manufactures we know firsthand board regulations are challenging, time-consuming, redundant and change a lot. taxes, fees, mandates and regulations are currently enacted without considering the accumulative and dynamic impact. the more unpredictable the business environment, the less likely it would be a...
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170
Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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eye 170
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oblivious to the prevailing stimulus narrative but i did become aware because i write a lot about the environment that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy which was leveraging another $100 in private capital. the united states was spending $3 billion a year on clean energy before the recovery act. in 1999 washington completely knocked president clinton's pie in the sky plan to send $6 billion over five years on clean energy. it was that on arrival in congress and obama got $90 billion in his first month before his staff could even find a bathroom in the west wing. just ridiculous. the stimulus was pouring rivers of cash into wind, solar and other renewable energy efficiencies and every imaginable form and advance biofuels, a electric vehicles, cutting edge research, a smarter grid, cleaner coal, factories that make that green stuff in the united states and it was by far the biggest energy bill in history. it got me curious what else was in the stimulus everyone was laughing about. i did some dogged investigative reporting and the stimulus also launched race to the top which was a r
oblivious to the prevailing stimulus narrative but i did become aware because i write a lot about the environment that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy which was leveraging another $100 in private capital. the united states was spending $3 billion a year on clean energy before the recovery act. in 1999 washington completely knocked president clinton's pie in the sky plan to send $6 billion over five years on clean energy. it was that on arrival in congress and obama got $90...
129
129
Oct 6, 2012
10/12
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pretty oblivious to the prevailing stimulus narrative but i did become aware because i write about the environment that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy leveraging another $100 billion in private capital. it seems like tycos. the united states was spending billion a year on clean energy before the recovery act. in 1999 washington completely knocked president clinton's high in the sky plan to spend $6 billion for clean energy. was dead on arrival. obama got $90 billion in his first months before his staff could find bathrooms in the west wing. just ridiculous. the stimulus was pouring unprecedented rivers of cash and renewables and energy efficiency and every imaginable form, advanced biofuel and electric vehicles and cutting edge research, smarter grid, cleaner coal, factories to make that green stuff in the united states. it was by far the biggest energy bill in history. kind of got me curious what else was in the stimulus everyone was laughing about. i did some investigative reporting with a google search. i learned that the stimulus had also launched race to the top which was
pretty oblivious to the prevailing stimulus narrative but i did become aware because i write about the environment that the stimulus included $90 billion for clean energy leveraging another $100 billion in private capital. it seems like tycos. the united states was spending billion a year on clean energy before the recovery act. in 1999 washington completely knocked president clinton's high in the sky plan to spend $6 billion for clean energy. was dead on arrival. obama got $90 billion in his...
144
144
Mar 6, 2012
03/12
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eye 144
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job of helping the american public and congress understand that even in a very challenging economic environment we cannot shortchange investment in our young people coming and we have to make sure the of the tools to compete but we have to invest in our core infrastructure so we can continue to grow. i know i've said a lot and thrown a lot with you but i'm thrilled to have the chance to be with naco and i have time for a couple of your questions. if you have a follow-up, please, feel free to contact me directly. christine is here with me. some of you may remember christine has been with secretary vilsack working on the issues but her first love is the international affairs so she's going to run the intergovernmental relations so if you can't get me, feel free to reach out to christine. >> why don't we stop and take -- >> i see this gentleman. >> would you give your name and county? >> good afternoon. [inaudible] i got to meet with [inaudible] is the administration going to move an increase in the visa cap on the implementation of march march 15th but i think it's important we also look at the i
job of helping the american public and congress understand that even in a very challenging economic environment we cannot shortchange investment in our young people coming and we have to make sure the of the tools to compete but we have to invest in our core infrastructure so we can continue to grow. i know i've said a lot and thrown a lot with you but i'm thrilled to have the chance to be with naco and i have time for a couple of your questions. if you have a follow-up, please, feel free to...
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160
Jan 28, 2012
01/12
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this would create a safer treatment environment that these facilities for the youth and the staff to read the transfer will also allow the department of health and human services to put a greater focus on children impacted by abuse and neglect. we are all in this together. all of us have a responsibility to produce me to improve the system. the accountability starts with you and me. together we need to bring stability to nebraska's child welfare system. the focus should be on the future and on the measurable results. another key issue that we face is the new federal health care and all that raises taxes, cuts medicare and contains an enormous and funded medicaid funding. because it is the current law, our state is moving forward with a planning and designing of a state health insurance exchange. our state has been working hard for nearly two years to protect nebraska's interest and i want to share the lead to assure you we and our citizens that nebraska will not default to the federal government regarding the health insurance exchange. however, it is important to recognize that the u
this would create a safer treatment environment that these facilities for the youth and the staff to read the transfer will also allow the department of health and human services to put a greater focus on children impacted by abuse and neglect. we are all in this together. all of us have a responsibility to produce me to improve the system. the accountability starts with you and me. together we need to bring stability to nebraska's child welfare system. the focus should be on the future and on...
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50
May 3, 2012
05/12
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eye 50
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and decide what that threat environment would look like, then to determine what capabilities we would need to address it. and then look backwards at ourselves sitting in 2012 getting ready to submit a budget that goes from 1317, knowing we would have more opportunities over the next four years to build this force for 2020. against a strategy that we can see back in the fall. and 1317 submission was just really the first step in what will be four steps, because we will submit the pops, the program in operation and ran for 1317, 1418, 1519, 1620. so if we don't do it the way i just described on we will be doing this on an annual basis with no framework are really no idea where want to be in 2020, and we'll just back ourselves into 2020. i said i'm not going to talk about sequestration, but i have to mention sequestration in the context of the question. so as i stand here today before, we submitted our budget in february. it's in market right now in the congress of the united states. i don't know what is going to come back looking like. it's a pretty eloquently balanced instrument. that
and decide what that threat environment would look like, then to determine what capabilities we would need to address it. and then look backwards at ourselves sitting in 2012 getting ready to submit a budget that goes from 1317, knowing we would have more opportunities over the next four years to build this force for 2020. against a strategy that we can see back in the fall. and 1317 submission was just really the first step in what will be four steps, because we will submit the pops, the...
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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is a joint intergovernmental multinational environment. it is inter-agency participation. it's an environment that might require some combined maneuvers but also has a touch of terrorism, criminality, opportunists. to complex battlefield that one minute might require some level of combat operations in the next minute might require leaders to adapt and understand the social economic conditions they are operating in and out of the integrate inter-agency multinational, multinational actors in a very small area? that is important for us so we are now training toward that end adjusting that as we go forward. that will be important in informing us what are the capabilities we need and what are the modernization programs we need as we go forward? we also in my mind provide something that the other services can but we have had a lot of recent experience and that is providing jdf capable headquarters. and we have been able -- with completely over the last 10 or 12 years to play gtf force, the center of jt's so what we want to do is build capabilities that allow us to have joint tas
is a joint intergovernmental multinational environment. it is inter-agency participation. it's an environment that might require some combined maneuvers but also has a touch of terrorism, criminality, opportunists. to complex battlefield that one minute might require some level of combat operations in the next minute might require leaders to adapt and understand the social economic conditions they are operating in and out of the integrate inter-agency multinational, multinational actors in a...
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Sep 3, 2012
09/12
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our ability to control our information environment is gone. and how a government responds to that either by fighting it or by understanding that universal connectedness and the loss of control can be a good thing for one citizenry. how governments respond to that is a real test of its values. >> host: also joining us here on "the communicators" is joseph marx who's a reporter with nextgov. >> host: a lot of people have credited the arab spring as when the masses really took charge. how important do you think social media was to the arab spring and how will that effect movements going forward? >> guest: sure. some people refer to it as facebook revolutions or twitter revolutions. to be blunt, i think that's an overstatement. i think that people in these countries rebelled because of things like a lack of democratic participation, a lack of economic opportunity, frustration about corruption, frustration with ruling families and high food prices. i think that those five things had more to do with causing people to rebel than social media. now, ha
our ability to control our information environment is gone. and how a government responds to that either by fighting it or by understanding that universal connectedness and the loss of control can be a good thing for one citizenry. how governments respond to that is a real test of its values. >> host: also joining us here on "the communicators" is joseph marx who's a reporter with nextgov. >> host: a lot of people have credited the arab spring as when the masses really...
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Jul 20, 2012
07/12
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it can be used to monitor for environment use. help prevent the spread of we'res. however, there are substantial legal and constitutional issues involved in the deployment of aerial drones by federal agencies. as drone technology becomes cheaper it will become more wide spread and the threat to privacy will be more substantial. ethic supports compliance with currents federal law for the deployment of drone technology and limitation for federal agency and other organizations who obtain. the current state of the law is insufficient to address the threat. legislation is needed to protect against the use of drones surveillance tools and to provide for redress against drone operators who fail to comply with the protection. congress directed the faa to develop regulation encourage wide spread of drone in the u.s. the fourth coming regulations -- public and private drone operators including dhs and the custom and border bureau. earlier this year in a formal petition to the faa they urged the agency to conduct a rulemaking to implement the rulemaking for privacy drones. it
it can be used to monitor for environment use. help prevent the spread of we'res. however, there are substantial legal and constitutional issues involved in the deployment of aerial drones by federal agencies. as drone technology becomes cheaper it will become more wide spread and the threat to privacy will be more substantial. ethic supports compliance with currents federal law for the deployment of drone technology and limitation for federal agency and other organizations who obtain. the...
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Jul 19, 2012
07/12
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some choose to keep them in their environments. very hard choice. so where i was always getting advice from each other. it's a great relationship and it doesn't usually impinge on our voting. we vote our states, we vote our philosophies. we don't assure each other to change something because we all understand that our constituent is our first responsibility. but as far as can moderate and an understanding that not very many women have about the kinds of obstacles we face, it's really fun and interesting. >> i'm pretty sure the men don't chip in and buy a spa certificate for the one who's getting married, so that's probably different. you have this. if there were 83 women instead of the reverse, what would be different? would things be in the policies good for the tone that is taken, the way the approach that the senate takes towards doing its business quite >> in some ways yes, and in some ways now. we all get elected the same way. we run campaigns. usually they are tough. we have toughened up to meet those challenges. so in many ways, i think men c
some choose to keep them in their environments. very hard choice. so where i was always getting advice from each other. it's a great relationship and it doesn't usually impinge on our voting. we vote our states, we vote our philosophies. we don't assure each other to change something because we all understand that our constituent is our first responsibility. but as far as can moderate and an understanding that not very many women have about the kinds of obstacles we face, it's really fun and...
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Jul 28, 2012
07/12
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sins steps to save energy and help the environment. turns out barbra streisand while she tells you and me that spends $22,000 a year watering her garden and lawn. $22,000 a year. requests 120 bath size taliban entering the production studio which was used to claim 1353 ft semitrailers used at her concert. 1350, three ft semitrailers. she is the carbon dioxide wrecking ball. in fact for you and i -- we have to go around all day long spraying aerosol cans in the air. of course the left is only following after the footsteps of the guru of massages al gore whose tennessee home used 20 times the amount of electricity as wal-mart shopping -- he harps all the time about the environment. next up we have harrison ford. you may be wondering what is harrison ford doing? he is getting his chest waxed. maybe wondering why is harrison ford -- great actor, i love the indiana jones series -- why is he getting his chest waxed? he wanted to bring awareness to climate change so he had somebody wax up his chest for youtube commercial. how exactly does thi
sins steps to save energy and help the environment. turns out barbra streisand while she tells you and me that spends $22,000 a year watering her garden and lawn. $22,000 a year. requests 120 bath size taliban entering the production studio which was used to claim 1353 ft semitrailers used at her concert. 1350, three ft semitrailers. she is the carbon dioxide wrecking ball. in fact for you and i -- we have to go around all day long spraying aerosol cans in the air. of course the left is only...
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Aug 21, 2012
08/12
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so if we're talking about the environment, we can't think of just the united states' environment. we have to think of the environment and resources in mexico that are being strain in promoting immigration to the united states as well. >> great. i think we have time for one more question. >> the obama administration made -- can you speak louder? >> the obama administration made a proposed rulemaking change for hardship labor, to make it possible for family members who are in the united states, instead of having to leave the united states to be able to apply without leaving to have the three and ten-year ban waived. this seems like a small change but can you speak to what the impact this might have on the population of -- undocumented parents of children here in the united states. >> i think it would have a huge impact on the mexican community i've worked with for now 15 years. the implementation of the three and ten year ban has been devastating to families and family unity. lawyers i work with are not able to work on behalf of their clients because the hardship -- the bar for hard
so if we're talking about the environment, we can't think of just the united states' environment. we have to think of the environment and resources in mexico that are being strain in promoting immigration to the united states as well. >> great. i think we have time for one more question. >> the obama administration made -- can you speak louder? >> the obama administration made a proposed rulemaking change for hardship labor, to make it possible for family members who are in...